Business

Malaysia, Philippines may see 46% fall in GDP due to climate change: report

World economy will pay high price if no action is taken on a global level, says SwissRe economist

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 24 Aug 2021 11:30AM

Malaysia, Philippines may see 46% fall in GDP due to climate change: report
Countries of the Northern Hemisphere, which stand to lose the less, should do more to battle climate change, says chief economist of SwissRe. – Twitter pic, August 24, 2021

GENEVA – “Climate change is here, we need to act now,” said the chief economist of Swiss Reinsurance Company (SwissRe), warning of sharp global economic losses.

The world’s economy, especially poorer countries, will pay the “highest price” if no action is taken on a global level, said Jerome Haegeli, also managing editor of a report published recently, in an interview with the Xinhua news agency yesterday.

Haegeli said his team concluded that the global economy might lose 10% of its global GDP by 2048 if temperatures rise at the current speed, with countries in the Global South more affected than in the North.

Countries in Southeast Asia, such as Malaysia and the Philippines, are “extremely vulnerable” to climate change, and could lose up to 46% of their GDP by the end of the century if temperatures increase by 3°C compared with the 1800s, said Haegeli.

These countries, with large population density along their coasts and situated in tropical regions, are “highly exposed” to temperature increases, according to the economist.

However, countries of the Northern Hemisphere, which stand to lose the less according to the report, should do more, he said.

“We have to do what is right globally,” he said, stressing that developed countries should support the US$100 billion (RM420 billion) Green Climate Fund to help developing countries weather the effects of rising temperatures.

Alarm signals have rung worldwide as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change declared on August 9 that the world will reach 1.5°C of warming by 2040.

Haegeli said that SwissRe’s report is a realistic take that “we are behind” in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and that “the Paris Agreement is far away”. – Bernama, August 24, 2021

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